Categories: ENERGY

Shocking! Despite Multi Trillion Naira Investment In Power, 53 Nigerian Communities Have Been Living  In Darkness For 100 Years{The List}

<h4>Shocking&excl; Despite Multi Trillion Naira Investment In Power&comma; 53 Nigerian Communities Have Been Living  In Darkness For 100 Years&lbrace;The List&rcub;<&sol;h4>&NewLine;<p><strong><a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;openlife&period;ng&sol;">OpenLife Nigeria<&sol;a><&sol;strong> reports that despite multi trillion Naira incestror in power by successive government in Nigeria between 1999 and 2021&comma; no fewer than 53 communities in the Yewa North Local Government Area of Ogun State&comma; South West Nigeria&comma;  have lamented the hardship of living in darkness for more than 100 years&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Besides federal government’s investement in power&comma; there is also  a World Bank Electrification Project in that part of Ogun State&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The landlords&comma; residents&comma; and business owners&comma; who spoke to journalists&comma; said they had never enjoyed power supply since the creation of the communities&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The affected communities include Alagbada&comma; Fayoyi&comma; Ajegunle&comma; Erinpa 1&comma; Erinpa 2&comma; Abule Babalana&comma; Sunwa Ajegunle&comma; Mokoya&sol; Ogbungiri&comma; Abule Anila&comma; Abule Alata&comma; Aruku&comma; Pakoyi&comma; Lashilo&comma; Oloje&comma; Idi Iroko&comma; Abotokio&comma; Kajola&comma; Kajola- Alaga&comma; Ijaka-Isale&comma; and Ijaka– Oke&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Others are Ile – Ijoun&comma; Eeja&comma; Ile-Ika&comma; Ijale – Ketu&comma; Iyana Agbede&comma; Oke Odo Tobolo&comma; Tobolo&comma; Ibiyan&comma; Agbefa&comma; Okuta Gogoro&comma; Lafenwa&comma; Anga&comma; Akeru agbo Ogede&comma; Ageru Abeobi&comma; Akeru llukan&comma; Akeru Ajiode&comma; Oke Igbala &sol; Ijege&comma; Ikotun&comma; Ologiri&comma; Ojumo&comma; Igbeme&comma; Isagba&comma; Orile Oke Igbooro&comma; Orile Igbooro&comma; Abule Kuse&comma; Iselu&comma; Iselu-Orile&comma; Egbeda&comma; Ibeku&comma; Agbon Ojodu&comma; Kodera and Asa&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>It was learnt that the World Bank-facilitated electrification project in the area which has been abandoned&comma; was awarded in 2007 under the National Energy Development Project through the Project Management Unit of the Transmission Company of Nigeria&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The project was expected to provide and install a 50&sol;25 KVA pole-mounted transformer across the 53 communities with the distribution of free meters to residents&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>A visit to  some of the communities on Monday revealed that  the project was grounded&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Residents insisted that the project was a facade&comma; as they were never connected to the national grid despite erecting poles&comma; wires&comma; and transformers in their communities&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>However&comma; during a probe panel&comma; the Senate was told&comma; that the Federal Government had invested a N2&period;74 trillion in Nigeria’s power sector in  16 years &lpar;1999 to 2015&rpar;&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The investments were made during the regimes of former President Olusegun Obasanjo&semi; his successor&comma; late President Umaru Yar’Adua&comma; and President Goodluck Jonathan&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The Permanent Secretary&comma; Ministry of Power&comma; Ambassador Godknows Igali&comma; and the Managing Director&comma; Niger Delta Power Holding Company&comma; NDPHC&comma; Mr&period; James Olotu&comma; disclosed this before a Senate Ad-hoc Committee probing the power sector at that time&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Speaking&comma; Ambassador Igali told the Senate that former military Heads of state&comma; who ruled the country from the overthrow of former President Shehu Shagari&comma; up to 1999&comma; when democracy was reinstituted&comma; crippled the power sector&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>According to Igali&comma; this is because the successive regimes not only failed to recruit the relevant engineers for 19 years&comma; but also failed to invest in the power sector during their reigns&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>He disclosed that out of the 79 power generation units&comma; only 19 were functioning at that time&comma; adding that no new power plant was constructed from 1991 to 1999&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>He recalled that the last plant&comma; Shiroro was built in 1991&comma; long before the emergence of Obasanjo as president in 1999&comma; adding that consequently&comma; the power sector depreciated rapidly due to lack of consistent investment and funding until Obasanjo began the power reforms&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Igali further disclosed that despite the sector’s need&comma; budgetary votes were seldom released fully&comma; noting that the country cannot realise the full benefit of any investment in power unless the value chain elements – generation&comma; transmission and distribution were also revamped&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><em>He gave a breakdown of the appropriation and money released from 1999 to 2015 as follows&colon;<&sol;em><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><em>&ast;1999 – N11&period;206 billion appropriated&comma; N6&period;698billion released&semi;<&sol;em><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><em>&ast;2000 – N59&period;064billion appropriated&comma; N49&comma;785 billion released&semi;<&sol;em><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><em>&ast;2001 – N103&period; 397 billion appropriated&comma; N70&period;927 billion released&semi;<&sol;em><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><em>&ast;2002 – N54&period;647billion appropriated&comma; N41&period;196 billion released&semi;<&sol;em><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><em>&ast;2003 – N55&period;583billion appropriated&comma; N5&period;207billion released&semi;<&sol;em><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><em>&ast;2004 – N54&period;647billion appropriated&comma; N54&period; 647billion released&semi;<&sol;em><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><em>&ast;2005 – N90&period;283 billion appropriated&comma; N71&period;889 billion released&semi;<&sol;em><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><em>&ast;2006 – N74&period;308 billion appropriated&comma; N74&period; 3 billion released&semi;<&sol;em><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><em>&ast;2007 – N100 billion appropriated&comma; N99&period;8 billion released&semi;<&sol;em><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><em>&ast;2008 – N156 billion appropriated&comma; N112 billion released&semi;<&sol;em><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><em>&ast;2009 – N89&period; 5 billion appropriated&comma; N87billion released&semi;<&sol;em><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><em>&ast;2010 – N172 billion appropriated&comma; N70 billion released&semi;<&sol;em><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><em>&ast;2011 – N125 billion appropriated&comma; N61 billion released&semi;<&sol;em><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><em>&ast;2012 – N197&period; 9 billion appropriated&comma; N53&period; 5billion released&semi;<&sol;em><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><em>&ast;2013- N146 billion appropriated&comma; N49 billion released&semi;<&sol;em><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><em>l2014 – N69&period;8 billion appropriated&comma; N48 billion released&semi; and&comma;<&sol;em><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><em>&ast;2015 – N5&period; 240billion appropriated&comma; no money released yet&period;<&sol;em><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><strong>Overview of Nigeria’s Electricity Problem By Reuben Abati<&sol;strong><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Here is the main problem with Nigeria’s electricity sector&colon; Nigeria is Africa’s most populous nation&comma; but it has failed consistently to generate&comma; transmit and distribute enough electricity to power its development process and accelerate economic growth&period; Between 1999 and 2007&comma; President Olusegun Obasanjo focused on the reform of the electricity sector as one of the major priorities of his administration&period; Gas-powered plants were set up across the country under his watch&comma; turbines and other equipment were imported&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>His government laid the foundation for reform in the power sector but could not complete the process&comma; particularly the privatization of the power sector&period; Obasanjo’s legacy includes the National Electric Power Policy &lpar;NEPP&rpar; of 2001&comma; the National Electric Power Sector Reform Act of 2005 which established the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission &lpar;NERC&rpar;&comma; and the establishment of the Power Holding Company of Nigeria &lpar;PHCN&rpar;&comma; to replace the notorious National Electricity Power Authority &lpar;NEPA&rpar;&period; The PHCN was later unbundled into 18 successor companies&period; By the time President Obasanjo left office in 2007&comma; power generation in the country had increased from about 1&comma; 200 MW in 1999 to 4&comma; 000 MW in 2007&period; For a country of Nigeria’s size and population&comma; this was not enough to transform the country&period; Obasanjo was succeeded by President Yar’Adua&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>In the course of his campaign for Presidential office&comma; Alhaji Umaru Musa Yar’Adua stressed the importance of the electricity sector as an engine of growth&period; He promised to declare a national emergency in the sector&period; He eventually didn’t declare an emergency but shortly after assuming office in 2007&comma; President Yar’Adua established a Presidential Committee for the accelerated expansion of Nigeria’s power infrastructure with a mandate to ensure the delivery of 6&comma; 000 additional megawatts within 18 months and an extra 11&comma; 000 MW by 2011&period; By the time President Yar’Adua gave this directive&comma; Nigeria’s power generation capacity was down to 3&comma;000 MW per day&period; South Africa with a much smaller population was at the time generating 36&comma;000 MW&period; Egypt with a population of 78 million also had a generating capacity of 36&comma;000 MW&period; The Yar’Adua Committee which was given 18 days to do its work&comma; submitted its report one year later&excl;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The House of Representatives also conducted a probe of the electricity sector&period; The House Committee on Power led by Hon&period; Ndudi Elumelu accused the Obasanjo administration of having spent over &dollar;10 billion on the electricity sector without having much to show for it&period; The Committee disclosed that between 2000 and 2007&comma; the Obasanjo administration spent over &dollar;10 billion on various projects in the power sector&period; The Elumelu Committee raised questions and demanded answers&period; The Presidential Committee meanwhile recommended that the<a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;openlife&period;ng&sol;"> country would still need about &dollar;85 billion to meet the target of 20&comma;000 MW generating capacity<&sol;a> as recommended by the Vision 2020 Committee&period; President Yar’Adua in the course of it all&comma; ordered a probe of the Nigeria Electricity Regulatory Commission &lpar;NERC&rpar;&period; The Chairman of the NERC and six commissioners of the agency were suspended from office and invited for questioning&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>President Yar’Adua’s government soon entered into discussions with General Electric &lpar;GE&rpar; and later signed a Memorandum of Understanding with the German Government on power development projects in Nigeria&period; Siemens was one of the six German companies included in that MOU&period; The Government also launched a Gas Master Plan to address the problem of gas supply to the Papalanto&comma; Omotosho and Geregu power plants built by the Obasanjo government&period; Contracts worth over &dollar;660 million were awarded&comma; but despite all its good intentions&comma; the Yar’Adua government could not make much difference&period; Power supply remained epileptic in Nigeria&period; There are many who believe that the efforts of the Yar’Adua administration were abbreviated by a lack of urgency occasioned by the President’s health challenges and the obsession of that administration with the past administration’s expenditure in the power sector&period; It was so bad that power equipment worth &dollar;5 billion that had been imported in 2&comma;500 &lpar;or 800&quest;&rpar; containers by the Obasanjo administration&comma; which arrived three days after President Obasanjo left office were abandoned at the ports for three years&comma; Taxpayers incurred a demurrage of N4 billion&excl;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>President Yar’Adua was succeeded by Dr&period; Goodluck Ebele Jonathan&period; As former Chairman of the National Economic Council and former Chair of the National Council on Privatization&comma; Jonathan was certainly privy to the Electricity Sector Road Map and the Power Sector Master Plan&period; He continued where his former boss stopped&comma; but even more so&comma; from where Obasanjo stopped&comma; and by avoiding the ugly politics and blame game that had developed around the subject of electricity delivery in Nigeria&comma; he was able to make significant progress in the areas of accelerated reform&comma; policy execution&comma; provision of power sector infrastructure&comma; public-private sector partnership and privatization&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>President Jonathan had threatened&comma; right from his early days in power that he would privatize the PHCN&comma; and reform the electricity sector&period; In due course&comma; he launched a Power Sector Transformation Plan and gave full effect to the Nigeria Electricity Sector Regulatory Act of 2005&period; He commissioned and upgraded a number of power plants including the Azura-Edo power plant&comma; the first fully privately owned Independent Power Plant in Nigeria&period; He re-organized the PHCN by selling off the Federal Government’s majority stakes in the 18 companies unbundled from PHCN in the shape of six Generation Companies &lpar;GENCOS&rpar;&comma; 11 Distribution Companies &lpar;DISCOs&rpar; and a Transmission Company owned fully by the Nigerian government&period; Private sector investors in the GENCOs and DISCOs paid as much as &dollar;3&period;3 billion for the acquired PHCN assets in what was considered an open and fair process even by international observers&period; Nigerian banks supported the process&comma; investments were also attracted to the gas sector&period; By 2013&comma; the power sector had resurrected with installed generation capacity at about 12&period;910 MW&comma; but available capacity nevertheless remained at less than 7&period; 652 MW&period; Transmission capacity was 8&comma;1000 MW while a distribution peak of 5&comma;375 MW was recorded&period; Thus&comma; the problem of low capacity utilization persisted&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>President Goodluck Jonathan handed over to President Muhammadu Buhari in 2015&period; Like other Presidents before him since 1999&comma; President Buhari even as a candidate promised to transform Nigeria’s power sector&period; In the run up to the 2015 elections&comma; President Buhari in a document titled &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;Covenant with Nigerians” and also in the &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;APC Manifesto”&comma; promised that &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;The APC government shall vigorously pursue the expansion of electricity generation and distribution of up to 40&comma;000 MW in 4 to 8 years&period;” The promised figure was twice the Vision 2020 Committee projection of 20&comma;000 MW by 2020&period; The reality is that the Buhari administration has not been able to deliver on that promise&period; In 2017&comma; former Minister of Power&comma; Housing and Works&comma; Babatunde Fashola claimed that the government had achieved a record 5&comma;074 MW in actual power generation&period; From 2015 to date&comma; President Buhari has continued to give assurances that his administration will sort out the electricity sector crisis&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The administration has reportedly spent more than N900 billion on the power sector as intervention fund&period; It has signed a six-year contract with Siemens of Germany for an upgrade and technical input across the value chain to generate up to 25&comma;000 MW in three phases&period; The Buhari administration accuses previous administrations – Obasanjo&comma; Yar’Adua and Jonathan’s of wasting Nigerian resources on the power sector without results and the Jonathan administration of mismanaging the privatization process&period; It is alleged that over &dollar;6&period;8 trillion has been spent on Nigeria’s power sector since 1999&period; Meanwhile&comma; the country remains literally in darkness&period; Many companies have had to relocate from Nigeria&period; Businesses&comma; homes and families are compelled to provide their own electricity&period; The cost of diesel is high&period; Many lives have been lost to generator explosions&period; There are communities in Nigeria that have not seen electricity for seven years&comma; simply because they are not connected to the national grid&excl; <a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;thisdaylive&period;com&sol;">The House of Representatives has asked President Buhari to declare a state of emergency in the electricity sector&period;<&sol;a> The standard response has been to blame either the former ruling party&comma; the PDP &lpar;1999- 2015&rpar; or the Jonathan privatization process or more specifically&comma; the power distribution companies&period; In 2017&comma; the Buhari government mooted the idea of probing the power sector from 1999- 2015&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Needless politicking&comma; sentiments and emotions have proven to be the bane of the electricity sector in Nigeria&period; Every Minister of Power since 1999 has always been ready with an excuse for inefficiency&period; Babatunde Fashola&comma; as Buhari’s Minister of Power&comma; Works and Housing heaped the blame on the privatization process&period; Buhari’s NERC blames the DISCOs and even threatened to revoke their licences&period; This blame game continued last week with Fashola’s successor as Minister of Power&comma; Engr Saleh Mamman threatening that the DISCOs are the problem of the electricity value-chain and if they do not sit up&comma; their licences will be revoked&period; He says he has even sent a memo to the Federal Executive Council to that effect&period; The FEC should ignore his memo&period; Mamman doesn’t sound like he knows what he is talking about&period; Ignorance is bad in itself&comma; but the kind of tripodal ignorance that has been demonstrated by the current Minister of Power is curious&excl;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>It seems to me that government needs to go beyond scapegoating&comma; passing the buck&comma; sentiments and politics&comma; to address fundamental problems of the electricity sector&comma; and cross-cutting issues in the entire value chain&period; There are consequential steps that should have been taken after the privatization exercise of 2013&sol;2014 to deepen the transition process away from PHCN which the current administration has conveniently ignored&period; This is in part responsible for the distortions within the entire value chain&period; If the Minister of Power does not know what these are&comma; he should consult the Bureau for Public Enterprises&comma; the National Electricity Regulatory Council and the Vice President’s Office which oversees the National Council on Privatization&period; If he does not trust anyone in those departments&comma; let him talk to Nasir el-Rufai&comma; the Governor of Kaduna State who as Director General of BPE&comma; at the time of the commencement of reforms in that sector can tell the story much better – that is&comma; if he doesn’t choose to play convenient politics&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>If el-Rufai plays politics with the matter&comma; let him talk to Dr&period; Lanre Babalola and Bola Onagoruwa&period; For example&comma; the Gas Production and supplies to the various Power Plants are still largely dependent on NGC&sol;NNPC which are government-controlled and as usual cannot respond to the 24 hours need of the privatised power generating plants&period; Unfortunately&comma; in the last 5 years&comma; this critical component of the value chain of power generation has not been resolved by President Buhari’s Government&period; Gas Production and supplies is yet to be privatised and NNPC&sol;FGN remain the major bureaucratic problem for the gas-based Electricity generating investors&period; Even the gas price in USD has not been allowed to be translated into appropriate naira tariff for the entire value chain of electricity supplies&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Recently we read in the media&comma; that Federal Government has granted sovereign guarantee to NNPC to build gas pipeline from Ajaokuta to Kano &lpar;AKK&rpar; for &dollar;2&period;8 billion&comma; with about two captive gas-powered generating plants along the gas pipeline&period; But any discerning observer of the industry will ask whether this AKK should be a priority now&comma; when you can deploy the &dollar;2&period;8 bill to solve the immediate problems of the stranded 10 gas-powered generating plants in the hands of NIPP&sol;Niger Delta Power Holding Company&period; It is certain that this &dollar;2&period;8 Billion project will not be completed in the next 3-4 years and may never get sufficient gas to reach Abuja nor Kano&comma; when even Kaduna refinery built since 1989 with Crude Pipeline from Escravos has never gotten enough to refine Nigeria’s export crude on a daily basis&period; These are the issues each of the Ministers has refused to look into&comma; focussing instead on chasing the DISCOS as the weeping child&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Is Minister Mamman aware at all of the existence of 10 power plants that are being managed by the Niger Delta Holding Company &lpar;NDHC&rpar;&comma; a limited liability company that is managed by public officers&quest; The Minister of Power was quoted as saying Nigeria now has a generating capacity of 13&comma;000 MW in 2020&period; In 2013&comma; Nigeria had a generating capacity of 12&comma;910 MW&period; What has been added since 2015&quest; Even if 7&comma;000 MHW is produced today&comma; can TCN with her 330KV&sol;132KV transmit that much to all the DISCOS&quest; The answer is capital NO&period; The Minister pretends not to know that TCN is the weakest link between the GENCOS and DISCOS&period; The Minister should show us how much has gone into 330KV&sol;132KV in the last 5 years across Nigeria&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The Federal Government could have sold 10 more power plants to increase capacity&period; It has not done so&period; Even then&comma; the so-called claim of 13&comma;000 MW is at best academic and fictitious&period; Minister Mamman claims that the Transmission Company of Nigeria &lpar;TCN&rpar; has a capacity to transmit 7&comma;000 MW but it actually transmits about 5&comma; 000 MW out of which the DISCOs can only take about 3&comma;000MW&period; There is shortage of electricity in the country and so&comma; high demand for limited supply has driven up prices and yet government is insisting on the withdrawal of subsidy and a hike in electricity tariffs by April 1&period; I don’t get it&period; No wonder all the private sectors&comma; industrial and commercial houses generate electricity at about 70-85 Naira per kilowatt hour for themselves&period; But this has disenabled them from competing with other manufacturers around the world&period; This is one of the major reasons that the private sector must be allowed to take over the entire value chain of the electricity industry&period; Since 2015 that Yola DISCO has been returned to the Federal Government&comma; it will interest the general public to hear from the Minister&comma; how much investment in 132KVA&comma; 33KVA and 11KVA infrastructure has been provided in the entire North East that Yola DISCO covers&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The Buhari government simply needs to move beyond politics and sentiments&period; If President Buhari succeeds in solving the electricity supply conundrum in Nigeria&comma; that alone will be enough legacy for his administration&period; He should listen only to those who know&period; Engr&period; Saleh Mamman has absolutely no clue&period; I hope the Minister knows he is a member of the National Council on Privatisation and therefore cannot take any policy decision without NCP approval first&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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